Chicago Sun-Times

PROMINENT LAWYER LEVING ACCUSED BY ATTORNEY COMMISSION OF BILLING CLIENTS UNREASONAB­LE FEES

- BY MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N, STAFF REPORTER mhendricks­on@suntimes.com | @MHendricks­onCST

A Chicago lawyer known for his advocacy for fathers in custody cases has been accused of billing clients for thousands of dollars in fees that didn’t match the value of the work his firm performed.

A complaint filed in January by the state’s Attorney Registrati­on and Disciplina­ry Commission and posted online this week accuses attorney Jeffery M. Leving of charging unreasonab­le fees to clients and failing to refund unearned fees, in violation of the Illinois Rules of Profession­al Conduct.

Leving’s firm promotes itself as “The Premier Chicago Family Law Firm” and focuses on representi­ng fathers in divorce and child custody matters.

Leving hasn’t filed his formal response to the complaint, but his firm provided a statement Wednesday saying he took the allegation­s seriously and disputes violating the code of conduct.

“Mr. Leving’s firm has provided legal counsel for many thousands of clients over the decades and has reunited countless children with their fathers. He takes pride in these accomplish­ments,” a spokeswoma­n for the firm said in an email.

The complaint identifies eight clients who said they were billed thousands of dollars for legal services by Leving’s firm despite the firm accomplish­ing little on their behalf that would justify the fees.

In several cases, clients were charged so much beyond their initial retainers that they were forced to represent themselves in court because they lacked the money to hire another attorney, the filing states.

In one case, the commission wrote that Leving’s firm “did not accomplish any” of the client’s stated goals for their representa­tion despite charging more than $20,000.

Clients said they were at times billed for legal services by several attorneys at the firm and for the services of a private investigat­or, for which they were not consulted. Those services quickly used up the clients’ retainers and led to them accruing additional fees, the complaint states.

Each time a new client retained the services of the Leving firm, a required meeting was held that included an intake attorney who first talked with the client, the firm’s managing attorney, a less experience­d “mentee attorney” and a more experience­d “mentor attorney” who would be assigned to cases jointly, according to the complaint.

“All four attorneys bill separately for the time spent attending this initial meeting,” the filing said.

If a mentee attorney went to court, they were required by the firm to be accompanie­d by a mentor attorney, regardless of the nature of the appearance, the filing claims. At Leving’s direction, “each attorney charged the client for at least one hour of time for the court appearance regardless of its actual length.”

Leving was aware of the fees being charged to clients, the ARDC alleges. During bimonthly billing meetings, Leving “met individual­ly with every attorney” he employed to discuss billing matters on each of the cases they were working on.

One client who sought the firm’s help to modify his child support payments agreed to pay the firm a $6,000 retainer, the filing states. When he was later billed, the firm allegedly charged him for work done by four attorneys, a paralegal, a private investigat­or and a legal assistant.

As a result, the client was told he owed thousands of dollars in additional fees, despite the firm never filing a motion to have his child support payments adjusted, the complaint states.

During the time the client was represente­d by the firm, the only pleadings filed for the client “were an appearance and a motion to withdraw,” the filing states.

The complaint alleges the value of the services the client received in the three months of representa­tion “did not warrant the Leving Firm’s retention of the $6,000 it received ... or the additional $3,900.26” it attempted to collect, according to the filing.

Another client was charged nearly half their initial $10,000 retainer for 13 hours of time the firm’s lawyers “allegedly spent working on withdrawin­g” from the case, just days before the client’s case went to trial.

That client ultimately paid Leving’s firm $59,000 in legal fees, with the firm attempting to collect an additional $80,000 for less than three months of representa­tion, the filing states.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Attorney Jeffery M. Leving at his law office in Chicago.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Attorney Jeffery M. Leving at his law office in Chicago.

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